Career: mostly in Germany, though he also spent a. significant number of years in Italy and Russia, until he returned to Switzerland near the end of his career.

Death: Basel, Switzerland

4. Education

Schooling: Basel, M.A., D.D.

Studied theology at Basel, receiving his B.A. (1695), his M.A. (1696), and passing his theological examination (1701). (This is ambiguous; I interpret it to mean a degree in theology.) He studied mathematics contemporaneously under Jakob I Bernoulli.

5. Religion

Affiliation: Calvinst (assumed)

He was not comfortable living in Catholic Italy.

6. Scientific Disciplines

Primary: Mathematics, Mechanics

7. Means of Support

Primary: Academia

1707-1713, occupied the chair of mathematics at the University of Padua.

1713-1724, he had a position (I am not certain what kind) at Frankfurt-an-der-Oder.

1724-1731, he was connected with the St. Petersburg academy, some sources call him the "professor of higher mathematics." He left finally with a pension of 200 Rubels.

1722, he received--by lottery--the professorship of ethics and natural law at Basel. He was bound to remain in St. Petersburg, so he arranged a substitute until he was able to return in 1731.

1731, assumed his chair at Basel.

8. Patronage

Types: Scientist, Court Official

His most important patron was Leibnitz, who arranged his membership in the Berlin academy (1701), and his appointments at Padua (1707) and Frankfurt.a.d.O.

While at St. Petersburg, Hermann gave instruction in mathematics to Peter the Great's grandson, the future Peter II.